Artists meeting on Sunday 10th Feb at Raveningham, walking the Sculpture Trail in the rainBeautiful Castell Farm, at the heart of the trail. A Tudor farmhouse with an old orchard, meadows and gardens.Artist Ian Brownlie, who will be collaborating with Sue Tyler and Burgh Castle Almanac members to create something between a geodesic dome and a free woven structure big enough to stand in

The Waveney Valley Sculpture Trail run by Waveney and Blythe Arts will be open from the end of July to the beginning of September. We are thrilled that Burgh Castle Almanac will be creating an inviting interactive dome that will embody something of the history and changing flow of the landscape. The structure will feature images and flora from Burgh Castle, and will be partly built on site using found wood, trees and branches.

John Lanchester, whose latest novel The Wall is about a massive fictional defensive structure, discusses the way walls feature in literature and art with poet and art critic Sue Hubbard, from cave paintings to artworks like Andy Goldsworthy’s 750 feet long drystone wall.

Artist Luke Jerram takes us on a tour around his home city of Bristol discovering unusual wall art such as the Magic Wall, where children leave toys between the stones, and early works by Banksy.

Mexican artist Tanya Aguiniga, who travelled each day to school in the US, has set up an art project on the US/ Mexico border. She is joined by Suzanne Lyle, Head of Visual Arts for the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, to discuss the influence of borders on art.

Maybe the first person in east Norfolk looked like this, but the earliest known man in England had dark skin and dark curly hair – Cheddar Man, 10,000 years ago. A collar of monkey teeth in amongst native American objects, a cabinet of curiosities that is a reminder of meetings in the USA sunflower fragment that is a broken bit of something that has become another thing in its own rightFamily history of two world wars, stories that were never told at the time, conscription, joining up, bombs dropped along the coast, rumours of Hitler’s interest in Norwich City Hall, straffing shots in LowestoftA Morrison shelter, imagine sleeping in there in war time, such a strange object, catching the eyeSubmerging in the 19th Century, heavy boots to keep you secure on the sea bed, being underwater and then coming up, a risky businessA signwriting apprenticeship at £9 a week, painting the flesh background for huge faces of huge stars who performed in Great Yarmouth. The faces were fixed on the theatre front and burned at season’s end. Making and sharing tapes, the tape spooling out and having to be wound back in, it’s still a better sound than digital, and now its a museum object, along with trolls, my little pony and a chopper bike